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Mr. Berman - Social Studies 9R Unit #6: Ancient Rome Assignment
Mr. Berman - Social Studies 9R Unit #6: Ancient Rome Assignment

2. Caesar`s Victory a) Because Pompey`s forces were in the eastern
2. Caesar`s Victory a) Because Pompey`s forces were in the eastern

Ancient Greece and Rome - Fort Thomas Independent Schools
Ancient Greece and Rome - Fort Thomas Independent Schools

... life); controlled taxes & spending; could veto any bill passed by assembly • Assembly of Centuries: only soldiers allowed; could vote on laws but had no veto power; chose consuls (2) who carried out the laws • Assembly of Tribes: made up of plebeians; could only make laws for plebeians; had no veto ...
The Fall of the Western Roman Empire was the period of
The Fall of the Western Roman Empire was the period of

... suggested that parts of the periphery were no longer inhabited because these fortifications were restricted to the center of the city only. By the late 3rd century, the city of Rome no longer served as an effective capital for the Emperor, and various cities were used as new administrative capitals ...
WORLD HISTORY Greece and Rome NOTES
WORLD HISTORY Greece and Rome NOTES

133-27 BC - Mr. Hannigan
133-27 BC - Mr. Hannigan

GEO 400
GEO 400

... Using pages 42-43, locate the major cities during the height of the Roman Empire (Constantinople, Rome, Jerusalem, Alexandria, Tripoli). Where are these cities located (coastal, inland)? Put a star on the most populated city. How many people lived there? Discuss how the population of cities might af ...
Focus on Roman objects
Focus on Roman objects

... Focus on Roman objects Notes for secondary teachers ...
PL 3370 (British Social Philosophy)
PL 3370 (British Social Philosophy)

Ch 11GRQ - AP World History
Ch 11GRQ - AP World History

5104 EDU-092 Olympus Pre Visit Kit_Timeline_F.indd
5104 EDU-092 Olympus Pre Visit Kit_Timeline_F.indd

... Hellenistic Period (323-146 BC) Greek civilization had a powerful influence on the Roman Empire. Indeed, some modern scholars see the Roman era as a continuation of the same civilization, which they label Greco-Roman. The Roman conquest carried many features of Greek civilization to far-flung parts ...
The Roman Republic was established in 509 B.C., after Roman
The Roman Republic was established in 509 B.C., after Roman

... ed the republic. Only a strong central authority seemed able to govern the empire. This where the Ro man Republic ended and the Roman Empire began. The reign of Augustus marked the beginning of a long period of stability, which became known as the Pax Romana (Roman Peace). The Pax Romana lasted abou ...
Imperial Rome: 14-180 CE
Imperial Rome: 14-180 CE

... and law. The Romans actively built up large urban centers throughout the Empire and granted these cities all the rights and privileges granted to Romans. These cities were ruled by the upper classes who, as a result, grew increasingly loyal to the emperor. At the same time, Rome began to exercise mo ...
Spartacus - Greenwood Lakes Social Studies
Spartacus - Greenwood Lakes Social Studies

... after 265BC, many conquered people were auctioned off as slaves. Many of the great architectural achievements of ancient Rome were created with the grueling labor of slaves. A slave named Spartacus led a slave revolt that threatened the stability of the Roman Republic. Spartacus was likely from Thra ...
The Fall of the Roman Republic
The Fall of the Roman Republic

... another would-be king. To save what they saw as a crumbling republic, a small group of Senators, led by Marcus Brutus, assassinate Caesar in the Senate on March 15, 44 BC. ...
Roman Powerpoint - Cloverleaf Local Schools
Roman Powerpoint - Cloverleaf Local Schools

File
File

... Aula Palatina, (now known as The Basilica), Early 4th century. Trier, Germany ...
Roman Theatre - LVV-4U1 Classical Civilizations
Roman Theatre - LVV-4U1 Classical Civilizations

... the peformances and taken down afterwards. •There were two abortive attempts to build permanent stone theaters in 179 and 174 BC, but they were never completed. • In 154 BC a third attempt was made to build a permanent stone theater, but the consul, P. Scipio Nasica, caused the unfinished structure ...
File - Latin and Classical Studies at BCSS
File - Latin and Classical Studies at BCSS

...  He was handsome, intelligent, and sensitive to criticism  He moved in aristocratic circles  He travelled to Greece to find new plays  Was relatively young when he died (died of grief b/c his baggage full of new plays was lost)  Most of his plays were failures – he realized that times were chan ...
Collapse of the Roman Republic & Civil War
Collapse of the Roman Republic & Civil War

... Empire • Augustus launched military conquests • Pax Romana (“Roman Peace”) – 27 BCE to 180 CE (207 yrs.) – Farming, manufacturing, & trade prospered – Pop. = 60-80 mill. (1 mill. in Rome) ...
She-wolf
She-wolf

Roman Life - Rossview Latin
Roman Life - Rossview Latin

File - AP World History
File - AP World History

... In 218 BC during the second of the Punic Wars, Hannibal, a Carthaginian general invaded from the north with his army and war elephants. They went by way of Spain, gaining allies along the way. In 216 BC Hannibal tricked the Romans. He pretended to retreat, then surrounded and smashed them, and got ...
5. Rome: The Decline of the Roman Empire
5. Rome: The Decline of the Roman Empire

Class Struggle
Class Struggle

... ► We call it class distinction, the feeling that some people are "upper class" while others are "lower class" and inferior. ...
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Switzerland in the Roman era

The territory of modern Switzerland was a part of the Roman Republic and Empire for a period of about six centuries, beginning with the step-by-step conquest of the area by Roman armies from the 2nd century BC and ending with the decline of the Western Roman Empire in the 5th century AD.The mostly Celtic tribes of the area were subjugated by successive Roman campaigns aimed at control of the strategic routes from Italy across the Alps to the Rhine and into Gaul, most importantly by Julius Caesar's defeat of the largest tribal group, the Helvetii, in 58 BC. Under the Pax Romana, the area was smoothly integrated into the prospering Empire, and its population assimilated into the wider Gallo-Roman culture by the 2nd century AD, as the Romans enlisted the native aristocracy to engage in local government, built a network of roads connecting their newly established colonial cities and divided up the area among the Roman provinces.Roman civilization began to retreat from Swiss territory when it became a border region again after the Crisis of the Third Century. Roman control of most of Switzerland ceased in 401 AD, after which the area began to be occupied by Germanic peoples.
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